Post-Separation Family Conflicts and Child Well-Being

Research question/goal:

A considerable body of literature has identified that post-separation children face disadvantages concerning their cognitive and social skills compared to children who live with both of their biological parents in a household. Most existing research analyses families in the US; only in the last years, the association between non-intact families and child outcomes has been examined increasingly in the continental European context. However, only few studies explicitly investigate mediators of this association.

In this project, we investigate the mediating effect of different types of conflicts that can occur in post-separation families. We distinguish conflicts between the two biological parents, between the mother and her new partner, between the child and each biological parent, and between the child and the stepparent in the household. Especially information about stepparent–child and step-parental relationship quality might improve our understanding of why children who live with their two biological parents fare better than those who live in stepfamilies. We focus on two child well-being indicators as outcome variables (behavioural problems and emotional symptoms), using data of 8- to 16-year-old children surveyed in the German Family Panel pairfam.

Fact sheet

Funding:

MZES

Duration:

2018 to 2022

Status:

in preparation

Data Sources:

survey dataset

Geographic Space:

Germany

Publications

Conference Presentations

Schmid, Lisa, and Sandra Krapf (2018): Infidelity in partnerships and union dissolution in Germany. [16th Meeting of the European Network for the Sociological and Demographic Study of Divorce, Tel Aviv, October 10th to October 12th, 2018]more

Krapf, Sandra (2018): New family constellations and child well-being in Germany. [European Population Conference, Brussels, June 06th to June 09th, 2018]more

Krapf, Sandra, and Marcel Raab (2018): Unstable family arrangements and children's well-being. [16th Meeting of the European Network for the Sociological and Demographic Study of Divorce, Tel Aviv, October 10th to October 12th, 2018]more

van Damme, Maike, Sandra Krapf and Michael Wagner (2018): Housing density and its consequences in Germany: Staying, moving, or breaking-up?. [16th Meeting of the European Network for the Sociological and Demographic Study of Divorce, Tel Aviv, October 10th to October 12th, 2018]more